One-year CETES yields are lower, but still restrictive in real terms
The 364-day CETES rate measures the yield on Mexican Treasury Certificates with approximately one year to maturity. It is a key short-to-medium-term sovereign benchmark because it reflects market pricing for government funding, expected monetary policy, inflation compensation, liquidity conditions, and investor demand for peso-denominated public debt.
Recent dynamics
Mexico’s 364-day CETES rate started 2025 near 10.06%, reflecting a still-restrictive monetary environment and elevated sovereign short-term yields. The rate then declined steadily through January and February, moving below 9.5% and approaching the 9.1% range by the end of February.
The decline continued during the second quarter of 2025. By late April, the 364-day CETES rate had moved toward the 8.4% range, and during May and June it stabilized around the low-8% area. This suggested that markets were increasingly pricing a lower expected policy-rate path and reduced near-term interest-rate pressure.
During the second half of 2025 and early 2026, yields continued to drift lower, though with periods of volatility. The rate fell below 8% in August 2025 and moved toward the mid-7% range by late 2025. In 2026, the 364-day CETES rate fluctuated around the 7% area, with the latest reading near 6.97% in June 2026.
Interpretation and economic signal
The current signal is one of lower sovereign yields. Compared with one year earlier, the 364-day CETES rate has fallen substantially, confirming that market interest rates have adjusted downward alongside the broader easing in Mexico’s interest-rate environment.
Lower CETES yields can reduce government short-term funding costs and ease financial conditions for peso-denominated assets. They also tend to influence broader fixed-income pricing, money-market instruments, and investor allocation decisions. However, the rate remains high relative to many developed-market benchmarks, suggesting that Mexico still offers a meaningful nominal carry premium.
From an Austrian perspective, the key issue is whether the decline in yields reflects genuine disinflation and stronger real savings, or whether it mainly reflects expectations of policy easing. When rates fall because real inflation risk declines, the signal is healthier. When rates fall too quickly relative to underlying inflation and savings behavior, they can encourage excessive credit creation and distort capital allocation.
Overall, the 364-day CETES rate points to easier market conditions, but not to loose money. With core inflation still above 4%, the real yield remains positive, meaning the one-year sovereign curve continues to provide a restrictive anchor even after the decline in nominal rates.
Conclusion
Mexico’s 364-day CETES rate stood near 6.97% in June 2026, well below the level observed one year earlier. This confirms a meaningful decline in one-year sovereign yields and a clear easing in market expectations.
The current signal is one of lower sovereign yields with still-positive real-rate support. The next readings should be monitored alongside Banxico’s policy rate, inflation, core inflation, money supply, and exchange-rate behavior to evaluate whether the easing remains consistent with macroeconomic stability.